Junk
I have trouble getting rid of things I know I can use in an art project. I save coffee stirrer sticks (the wood ones), java jackets, magazines (for collage) and wine bottle corks. This earns me a certain amount of razzing. C’est la vie!
I have trouble getting rid of things I know I can use in an art project. I save coffee stirrer sticks (the wood ones), java jackets, magazines (for collage) and wine bottle corks. This earns me a certain amount of razzing. C’est la vie!
Ah, but on the other hand, Brig, you and Randie are recycling… which trumps any sort of razzing š
Oh, so nice to get an internet hook up again, if only temporarily.
The 1st Friday, openhouse was very taste-y, and, brig, you now have photos of some frequent commenters in attendance, to share or keep secret as you choose.
As for the strip. I tend to hang on to things much like Rye. It seems like a sort of toss up to have your old possessions either go to trash intact, or become art by being disassembled, cut up, pasted, written on, drawn in, or served as paint rags. All right, I’ll have to say being reused part and partial is better, if only by a skinch.
erk,
that should have been ‘serving as…’, and ‘part and parcel…’.
need more coffee.
Randie, at least is getting lots of Rye fill-ins, connections and artistic material rememberances.
nice of him; good for her.
Too true. I have stacks and piles of this-and-that that I will SOME DAY make into a masterpiece. Until then…yeah, artists are filthy hoarders.
I’ve been a bit of a “binge then purge” pack rat most of my life. I’ll never end up on hoarders or anything, but I can always imagine a use for something, and circumstance that just might happen where that use will come to pass.
Then, every five years or so, I’ll think, “I’m just going to take my chances” and toss 80% of it.